We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. - a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR [Russ.,= self-publishing house]

Barak and Iran

I ran across this interesting article a few minutes ago.

The educated conclusion right across the Middle East is that Iran is determined to become a nuclear power. How to deal with this conclusion is far more controversial.

“Indeed”, as our good friend Glenn is wont to say.

A magnificent bit of piloting

I am sure many of you have by now heard the coverage about the airplane crash into waters off of La Guardia airport in New York.

What I have not heard yet are comments on the fine piloting it took to grease a rather good size metal bird into the water. The pilot could not have had many minutes to think about his options, and yet as far as I can see, he did everything flawlessly.

I just want you all to ponder what it takes to bring a commercial transport of that size down on the water, in one piece, floating and with all your passengers alive.

The pilot and co-pilot of this flight deserve all of the applause we can give them and a heart felt thank you from all the passengers and their families.

Congratulations on a first anniversary

The UK Libertarian party is celebrating its first year of operations.

May 2009 see them grow and prosper and may they do much to undermine the foundations of the limited right-Statist and left-Statist UK political scene.

People to remember

Blogger and soldier Andrew Olmsted was mentioned on a Fox News report I listened to on the net tonight. His posthumous last post from January of this year seems worthy of Christmas Eve.

If I (and apparently he) are wrong and there is an after… I sincerely hope it is populated by souls such as his.

White Knight Two flies

The carrier aircraft for SpaceShipTwo took off for its first test flight. This is the first step of what will probably be a year long test program culminating in drop tests and flights of the world’s first tourist spaceship.

It is late over here. I am sure there will be a lot of information up about it. If not, talk to me tomorrow!

Tranquility Dome

You might find this initial pilot for an animated not so far off future, ‘Tranquility Dome’, a lot of fun. The author, Chip Prosser, asked me to take a look and now I am wondering how soon the next episode will be available!

Merry Christmas from Belfast

Beflast City Hall Bazaar
City Hall Christmas bazaar.
Photo: copyright Dale Amon, All Rights Reserved

The passing of an Enterprise crew member

I have been informed that Majel Barrett Roddenberry has died. She is best known to many as Nurse Chapel aboard the original Starship Enterprise. Despite being a major celebrity, she was perfectly at ease joining the rest of us in the hospitality suites until all hours of the night.

Somewhere I have a photo of her behind the suite’s ‘bar’ counter chatting with Buzz Aldrin, Lori Garver and another close friend of mine, Beverly Freed at once of our International Space Development Conferences.

She and her husband Gene Roddenberry, who died in the early 1990’s, were strong supporters of the National Space Society’s goal of a solar system wide human civilization.

Here are a few links to photos of Majel I took at the 1993 ISDC in Huntsville, Alabama.

Majel accepting posthumous award on behalf of Gene Roddenberry.

Majel accepting posthumous award on behalf of Gene Roddenberry

Majel with Lori Garver (currently member of the Obama transition team for space policy)

Majel with Buzz Aldrin

Meanwhile, the band played on… Home on Lagrange anyone?

Note: the dates on the files are the dates on which the rolls were developed, not the dates they were taken. Photos were scanned from prints and thus the quality is not wonderful.

Sounds like a re-run

I have just heard on an infrastructure mail list that India has lost much international bandwidth and the problem is due to failure on the SeaMeaWea3, SeaMeaWea4 and FALCON submarine cable systems at Alexandria.

There were multiple failures in Alexandria just a few months ago if I remember correctly.

Salman Rushdie and others at the Asia Society New York

The following article was written for us by Taylor Dinerman, a journalist whom we occasionally borrow from the WSJ. – Ed.

Last night, a sold out crowd at the Asia Society on Park Ave and 70th Street on Manhattan’s East Side came to hear Salman Rushdie, Sukutu Mehta and Mira Kamdar speak about the Attacks on Bombay. The obvious echoes of 9/11, and the large Indian and Jewish communities in New York ensured a big turnout.  

While Kamdar, an unimaginative, left wing intellectual who had lost a cousin in the attack on the Oberoi hotel and Mehta, an Associate Professor of Journalism at NYU and the author of a book on Bombay, ‘Maximum City’ shared the stage, Salman Rushdie was obviously the main attraction. He did not let his audience down.  

He began by rejecting, with utter disdain, the word ‘Mumbai’. He said it was nothing but the product of a politician’s grab for power. Indeed one of the themes of the evening was the inadequacy of the Indian state as compared to the nimbleness and effectiveness of the Indian private sector. This is ironic since the almost entirely liberal crowd seems to have no problem with President-elect Obama’s plan to vastly increase US state power and to do unspeakable things to the ‘capitalists’, car owners and other evildoers, in order to save the planet.  

Rushdie and the others, sang (metaphorically) hymns of praise to the vibrant, diverse, inegalitarian, port city of Bombay, the place where India meets the world and which   they all agreed was the heart of India’s economic miracle. Why capitalism, greed, economic freedom and cultural commercialism should be a self evident good thing in Bombay and not in America or Europe is one of those mysteries that defy rational explanation.

The panel agreed that by striking at Bombay the terrorists were attacking the freedom and the open spirit not only of the city but of today’s global civilization. Again, its is ironic that when George W, Bush and the neocons said the same thing about the attacks in the New York, they were hooted down by a crowd that claimed that the Islamists were only responding to western ‘injustice’.   

It is to Rushdie’s credit that he rejected this explanation. He put down the Islamic terrorists and their ideology by misquoting M.L.Menken’s famous definition of puritanism . What Menken wrote was “At the bottom of Puritanism one always finds envy of the fellow who is having a better time in the world.” He then added “At the bottom of democracy one finds the same thing.”

Rushdie also unambiguously put the blame for the attack on Pakistan. The panel agreed India’s western neighbor was the source of the problem, a failing state, full of fury, and armed with nuclear weapons. Of course there were the inevitable claims that America’s relationship with Islamabad and especially the CIA’s support for the Afghan Mujahedin was somehow to blame.  

Of course this meme fails to acknowledge that for the first twenty years of Indian independence the US tried desperately to make friends with New Delhi. Nehru, a socialist aristocrat, rejected offers of support from capitalist peasants like Truman and Eisenhower. He and his successors preferred to embrace the pro-Soviet Non-Aligned Movement. Pakistan’s elites were quite happy to embrace America, not just as a source of weapons and economic aide, but more important as a scapegoat they could blame for just about anything that went wrong with their country.   

While Kamdar was ready to damn Bush at every occasion, she was also ready to threaten Pakistan with war if they did not repress the Islamic terrorists. She also mentioned that the US would have to somehow put the issue of its supply lines to Afghanistan onto the back burner while dealing with Islamabad. This problem has gotten a lot of attention lately, but when a US General pointed out that all of NATO’s fuel for its operations there comes from Central Asia the threat of a cut off seems to have lost its urgency.  

In the end, one has to feel sorry for Rushdie. He must keep his up his standing as a man of the left, but he is too smart to swallow the kool-aid. So he is a hypocrite; not   a big deal, hypocrisy is universal and anyone who is not at least to some degree is an obnoxious fool.   He supported the Sandanistas when they repressed Nicaraguan free speech, but now celebrates the free media of India, not to mention his own right to write offensive novels.   

The attack on Bombay was the sort of thing we have seen before, in the 1970’s and 1980’s Israel suffered from the same kind of terrorism and developed an efficient coastal protection system in response. India will too, eventually.  

Terrorism is a contemptible form of warfare and the panel did not bother to refer to the attackers as anything other than cowards who went after ‘soft targets’. Rushdie stressed that they were incredibly coked up, snorting and shooting and snorting and shooting, all in the name of God.   

The passing of a good man

Less than an hour ago I cited Dr. Arthur Kantrowitz’s work on Science Courts in a Samizdata discussion, and in one of those strange and in this case saddening cases of synchronicity, I have just received an email notification that he passed away on November 29 at the age of 95.

Dr. Kantrowitz was a true gentleman of Science and will be much missed by all who have ever crossed his path.

I am sure others will have much more to say about his long career in the hard sciences.

Bussard Fusion results were positive

A hat tip to Counting Cats for the report. Jeff Foust has the story here.

I have been waiting for this news, as have many others, for months. Peer review of the test results have shown no reason why the technology will not work, although Dr. Nebel is quick to point out that nothing in the results guarantees it either.

Now… onwards to the next set of tests!